Having seen some code written by an esteemed Bio-Chemist, I agree that experienced programmers should be reviewing their code, but then, you'd expect a true scientist to have an expert review his stuff anyway.
My experience was a real eye opener. Between the buffer overruns, and logic holes, I am amazed the crap ran at all. The fact that it compiled was a bit of a mystery until I realized that it was possible to ignore compile errors.
Would you prefer summary offense and indictable offense then. After all this distinction, while going under different names, is NOT unique to the US despite your ignorance of the fact.
New being the new euphemism for something that's been around for over a decade, and stinks as much as it's parent, Rapid Application Development, born in the 80's.
Why does it stink ? Because it's implemented by mindless low level managers who fail to understand the point, and asked for by foolish high-level managers who are too impatient to let it produce the results it claims to produce. Meanwhile, the poor slobs working within its constraints get to attend "scrums" where they get to stand around during the most productive time of the day, explaining to their colleagues what they would be working on if they were at their desk.
Dollars/Euros/Rand in a rational market would cost only as much as they cost to make with perhaps a small premium.
Lesson: A medium of exchange (aka currency) is NOT necessarily a commodity.
Scarcity of the commodity vs. demand for the commodity drives the market price up or down in a rational market. I wonder if increased competition will do that to this market as more and more way to mine get distributed. I doubt it though, but time will pop the bubble anyway.
Lesson: I produce very few boogers, so they are scarce, BUT, importantly, there is to my knowledge zero demand for my boogers, so they have no value whatsoever. The number of bitcoins that will ever exist is finite (21,000,000), if the demand for them goes up, so will their price (or "value" if you wish to call it that).
There's no skills crisis, there's a corporate unwillingness to pay for skill crisis.You want me, who has spent nearly three decades learning continuously, struggling to understand the latest IT technologies, some so bleeding edge that I helped form the damned standards, to work for the same amount of money I earned 30 years ago, while you, with your Business Administration undergraduate degree from Florida State take home nearly a million a year because you talk a maelstrom of bullshit every time you open your mouth.
When I read the details about the circumstances under which one would need to pay to access the site, it struck me that Kim had hit upon a truly novel idea; to wit, make the copyright holder pay in order to access his own copyrighted material - in order to verify of course !
The problem is not that we (the people) are not willing to stand up and say enough. It's that we're not willing YET to say enough. The reason is that the revolution will be a very unsavory experience, and the current situation is (marginally) more agreeable.
That the revolution is coming, I have no doubt. The only question is how soon.
I think the problem is that there is regrettably very little we can do about it. Sure, the revolution is coming, but for now, the revolution looks more painful than the present reality. Eventually that balance will shift, and then, it won't be pretty either.
In his case, it definitely doesn't mean that. Having corresponded with him in the very early days of Linux, I found him to be supremely competent, surprisingly helpful (given his workload), and genuinely pleasant. None of those attributes align with your interpretation of the phrase.
I can't think of anyone who has given more to the Linux community than Mr. Cox - not even Linus, actually - and his departure will be felt immediately, and profoundly.
I tried to perform an upgrade from F17 via a DVD (burned from iso). After reading the FedoraProject wiki and seeing that preupgrade had been deprecated in favour of FedUp, I figured I'd go with the less fragile method of burning media from an ISO.
To make a long story short, after several failures, I gave FedUp a try, and it worked like a charm
I'm not sure what I would have done had I been performing a new installation, the installer was very flaky, and once even refused to boot. the whole experience has left me worrying about the fate of Fedora.
Come on Fedora team, you have produced much better.
You make me laugh...Do you suppose the totality of objects in our solar system is known ?
Jeezus, NASA (and others) find new objects of Toutatis's size nearly on a daily basis, how many smaller objects do you think there are , most of which are uncharted - for the obvious reason that they haven't been detected yet?
But, you're confident that some guy at NASA (trying to sound important) "knows" that none of them are going to affect Toutatis's path without telegraphing that information to him first.
We already know that Toutatis will not hit Earth for hundreds of year
Neglecting to consider that Toutatis could easily hit another (or pass very near another) reasonably sized object, thereby modifying it's course enough to hit us on its next pass.
I'm walking down the street, get 'distracted' by a hot looking girl (oops, forget this is slashdot), and bump into you. You on the other hand were walking down the street towards me, and looking at the Apple Store shop window (proving that you really are a dweeb instead of a geek), and weren't really paying attention to me approaching. Is this an accident ?
I had no idea what this topic was about until I read the article. Even then, I had to ponder how this is an issue I need to be worried about.
My condensed summary of all the findings:
Don't trust product reviews on most websites. The good websites, those that you are probably already using for your online purchases, such as Amazon, offer the most reliable reviews.
I guess being a cynic gets me through most difficult to comprehend issues without even noticing.
Moving parts + marine environment = endless well of maintenance and sorrow.
My thoughts exactly. It seems these guys haven't spent enough time at sea maintaining mechanical equipment. Anything left in an ocean environment clean enough for it to continue working will be covered with sea critters within months. I don't think there are any materials that have yet proved impervious to natures desire to host life.
Having seen some code written by an esteemed Bio-Chemist, I agree that experienced programmers should be reviewing their code, but then, you'd expect a true scientist to have an expert review his stuff anyway.
My experience was a real eye opener. Between the buffer overruns, and logic holes, I am amazed the crap ran at all. The fact that it compiled was a bit of a mystery until I realized that it was possible to ignore compile errors.
Would you prefer summary offense and indictable offense then. After all this distinction, while going under different names, is NOT unique to the US despite your ignorance of the fact.
Now that personalaudio.net has been slashdotted, how do you feel about the apparent inadvertent side effects of owning patents ?
New being the new euphemism for something that's been around for over a decade, and stinks as much as it's parent, Rapid Application Development, born in the 80's.
Why does it stink ? Because it's implemented by mindless low level managers who fail to understand the point, and asked for by foolish high-level managers who are too impatient to let it produce the results it claims to produce. Meanwhile, the poor slobs working within its constraints get to attend "scrums" where they get to stand around during the most productive time of the day, explaining to their colleagues what they would be working on if they were at their desk.
Hmm, let's test your thesis the really simple way
Dollars/Euros/Rand in a rational market would cost only as much as they cost to make with perhaps a small premium.
Lesson: A medium of exchange (aka currency) is NOT necessarily a commodity.
Scarcity of the commodity vs. demand for the commodity drives the market price up or down in a rational market. I wonder if increased competition will do that to this market as more and more way to mine get distributed. I doubt it though, but time will pop the bubble anyway.
Lesson: I produce very few boogers, so they are scarce, BUT, importantly, there is to my knowledge zero demand for my boogers, so they have no value whatsoever. The number of bitcoins that will ever exist is finite (21,000,000), if the demand for them goes up, so will their price (or "value" if you wish to call it that).
Bull$"/?
There's no skills crisis, there's a corporate unwillingness to pay for skill crisis.You want me, who has spent nearly three decades learning continuously, struggling to understand the latest IT technologies, some so bleeding edge that I helped form the damned standards, to work for the same amount of money I earned 30 years ago, while you, with your Business Administration undergraduate degree from Florida State take home nearly a million a year because you talk a maelstrom of bullshit every time you open your mouth.
F % ( # Y O U
It is quite amazing how someone could be so wrong in so many ways within a single paragraph.
There's a reason people use Radio (and higher) spectrum. Maybe these guys haven't heard.
When I read the details about the circumstances under which one would need to pay to access the site, it struck me that Kim had hit upon a truly novel idea; to wit, make the copyright holder pay in order to access his own copyrighted material - in order to verify of course !
Genius Kim, pure genius !
You are missing the point.
The problem is not that we (the people) are not willing to stand up and say enough. It's that we're not willing YET to say enough. The reason is that the revolution will be a very unsavory experience, and the current situation is (marginally) more agreeable.
That the revolution is coming, I have no doubt. The only question is how soon.
I think the problem is that there is regrettably very little we can do about it. Sure, the revolution is coming, but for now, the revolution looks more painful than the present reality. Eventually that balance will shift, and then, it won't be pretty either.
In his case, it definitely doesn't mean that. Having corresponded with him in the very early days of Linux, I found him to be supremely competent, surprisingly helpful (given his workload), and genuinely pleasant. None of those attributes align with your interpretation of the phrase.
I can't think of anyone who has given more to the Linux community than Mr. Cox - not even Linus, actually - and his departure will be felt immediately, and profoundly.
....aborted attempts at installing from DVD.
I tried to perform an upgrade from F17 via a DVD (burned from iso). After reading the FedoraProject wiki and seeing that preupgrade had been deprecated in favour of FedUp, I figured I'd go with the less fragile method of burning media from an ISO.
To make a long story short, after several failures, I gave FedUp a try, and it worked like a charm
I'm not sure what I would have done had I been performing a new installation, the installer was very flaky, and once even refused to boot. the whole experience has left me worrying about the fate of Fedora.
Come on Fedora team, you have produced much better.
... you mean she had enough to buy a few iPhones ?
Oh my god, arrest her, she has money, she must be doing something illegal !
You make me laugh...Do you suppose the totality of objects in our solar system is known ?
Jeezus, NASA (and others) find new objects of Toutatis's size nearly on a daily basis, how many smaller objects do you think there are , most of which are uncharted - for the obvious reason that they haven't been detected yet?
But, you're confident that some guy at NASA (trying to sound important) "knows" that none of them are going to affect Toutatis's path without telegraphing that information to him first.
We already know that Toutatis will not hit Earth for hundreds of year
Neglecting to consider that Toutatis could easily hit another (or pass very near another) reasonably sized object, thereby modifying it's course enough to hit us on its next pass.
Miller Time !
How about we dedicate a story to every time Microsoft writes a line of code in Windows?
I'd be far more interested to know when they remove a line of code.
One of my most productive days was throwing away 1000 lines of code. - Ken Thompson
He says that even with only a few connected cars, the system still works
Great, it only works under very low traffic conditions, in which case where's the problem ?
There's no such thing as an accident
A bit harsh when humans are involved.
I'm walking down the street, get 'distracted' by a hot looking girl (oops, forget this is slashdot), and bump into you. You on the other hand were walking down the street towards me, and looking at the Apple Store shop window (proving that you really are a dweeb instead of a geek), and weren't really paying attention to me approaching. Is this an accident ?
CO2 is fairly insignificant anyway. Everything else emitted by volcanoes affects climate more than CO2.
Ash
water vapor
SO2
nitrous oxide
Now, let's see who emits more of those, a volcano, or humans
Perhaps you are correct for CO2, but what about other green house gasses, which actually contribute much more to 'climate change' ?
I had no idea what this topic was about until I read the article. Even then, I had to ponder how this is an issue I need to be worried about.
My condensed summary of all the findings:
Don't trust product reviews on most websites. The good websites, those that you are probably already using for your online purchases, such as Amazon, offer the most reliable reviews.
I guess being a cynic gets me through most difficult to comprehend issues without even noticing.
1.) Adobe really must employ some of the worst developers in the commercial sector.
2.) Zero Day is undoubtedly one of the most idiotic labels in the computing sector.
Moving parts + marine environment = endless well of maintenance and sorrow. My thoughts exactly. It seems these guys haven't spent enough time at sea maintaining mechanical equipment. Anything left in an ocean environment clean enough for it to continue working will be covered with sea critters within months. I don't think there are any materials that have yet proved impervious to natures desire to host life.